Cites & Insights 9:3 now available

The 30-page issue is PDF, as usual. Three of the essays are available as HTML separates (using the links below). The first, which is also the longest, is available as a PDF separate–the inclusion of embedded Excel graphs within the document made HTML creation more cumbersome than I was willing to deal with.

This issue features the article versions of my two presentations for the OLA (Ontario Library Association) SuperConference, held just over a week ago in Toronto, Ontario. The first article is a longer version of my session “Shiny Toys or Useful Tools?”; the second article includes “My own take” as the first set of Tech Trends, and that was my initial commentary during the “Top Tech Trends” session.

Blogs and wikis aren’t shiny new toys for libraries and librarians any more. They’ve moved from toys to tools. This article includes the only defensible definitions of blogs and wikis that I know of, some comments about planning library blogs, and sections on the state of liblogs and library blogs in December 2008. Included–for the first time in C&I–graphs, eight of them. (As noted, the link is to a 9-page PDF.)

It’s that time of year again–time for lots of trendy commentaries. For a change, I begin with my own set: The trends I see “as vital for thinking about libraries, technology and life.”That’s followed by tech trends and commentaries from nine different sources, six of them library-specific; two sets of general trends, one of them just full of trendy neologisms; and three sets of forecasts (short-term predictions), one of them coupled with a scorecard for 2008.

My Back Pages (pages 29-30)

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One Response to “Cites & Insights 9:3 now available”

I just ran across your article on my impassioned letter against the ig nobel prizes. One doesn’t ordinarily remember all the responses one writes in the mood of after-viewing a website of most kinds, and I had forgotten this one.

Thank you for publishing my response, and responding back to it. I have a great big smile on my face after reading it, and it didn’t even take a prize to get it there.

(As far as coming last in the 2006 election was concerned, that was I, all right. Running was done for the experience, and I learned a great deal about the process.

At least all of my 194 votes came from people who were informed about my platform. The guy who was first on the ballot alphabetically won over 5000 votes; and his platform, as I recall, was that Toronto should secede from Ontario. I’m thinking about changing my name to Mark Aardvark-State for the next election!)

*All Cites & Insights PDF ebooks are explicitly site-licensed for
mounting on a library's server and providing to authenticated users. That
includes The Gold OA Landscape 2011-2014, A Library Is..., Beyond the
Damage and any others.